'William Wordsworth'
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illiam Wordsworth was born on 7 April 1770 in a fine Georgian house in
Cockermouth, now called Wordsworths House. His father John was estate agent to Sir James
Lowther, who owned the house. The garden at the back, with the River Derwent flowing past,
was a place of magic and adventure for the young William. William has an elder brother
Richard, a younger sister Dorothy and two younger brothers John and Christopher. |
n 1795 the Wordsworths stayed in a cottage in Dorset, where they met Samuel
Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey. In the years ahead a close relationship developed
between William, Dorothy and Coleridge. William and Coleridge then undertook a tour of the
Lake District, starting at Temple Sowerby, and finishing at Wasdale Head, via Grasmere. At
Grasmere they saw Dove Cottage, then an empty Inn called the Dove and Olive Branch.
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n December 1799 William and Dorothy moved into Dove Cottage, in Grasmere.
Coleridge having previously moved to Greta Hall in Keswick. Dorothy was William's
secretary as William dictated his poetry. In 1802 William married his childhood companion
Mary Hutchinson, and the first three of their five children were born. |
homas de Quincey was a permanent guest, and in 1808 as the cottage became
inadequate, they moved to Allan Bank in Grasmere, a large house that William had condemned
as an eyesore when it was being built. They lived here for two years, with poet and friend
Coleridge. They then moved to the Old Rectory, opposite St Oswald's Church, a cold and
damp house where his two youngest children died.
n 1813 they moved to Rydal Mount, where William and Mary stayed
until their deaths in 1850 and 1859. Whilst at Rydal Mount William became Distributor of
Stamps for Westmorland, and had an office in Church St Ambleside. In 1820 he published his
'Guide through the District of the Lakes'. In 1842 he became the Poet Laureate, and
resigned his office as Stamp Distributor. |
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e helped to choose the site of St Mary's Church, built just below Rydal Mount,
and where he was church warden from 1833 to 1834.
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n 1850 William caught a cold on a country walk, and he died on 23 April, St
George's day, 80 years after his birth. He and Mary who died 9 years later have a simple
tombstone in the churchyard of St Oswald's Church in Grasmere, now one of the most visited
literary shrines in the world. William Wordsworth wrote some 70000 lines of verse, 40000
lines more than any other poet. |
pposite Wordsworth House in Cockermouth is a Memorial to William Wordsworth
unveiled on 7 April 1970, the bicentenery of his birth.
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